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The Saturday Poem: Ely 1948

Written By Unknown on Saturday, June 1, 2013 | 4:05 AM


by Grey Gowrie


A de Havilland Dove ascends from a still-commissioned

East Anglian airfield and shakes its small

wings at all the damaged and marooned

Lancaster bombers. I watch it fly

until it is even higher than Ely cathedral,

an alp in this flat land.

Sky tries to sustain the little dove

a while longer and the two towers

swap sunrise and sunset. Afternoons

are flat, also, and grey: memorial services.

Cromwell and Co. hacked the noses off

shelved medieval saints. Our modern world

hums quite happily, like the de Havilland,

over the nave just now.

All my life I have loved the sun

and the colour of honey. Now I long for the dark

to crouch and soar in; with you, my grave, my cathedral.





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